== LLM Foundry local model proof == model=Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B-Instruct max_new_tokens=64 before_tokens=35 after_tokens=97 before_ms=10061.7 after_ms=4652.6 BEFORE (task only, no memory): Answer in 3 bullet points: why is the sky blue during the day and red at sunset? Keep each bullet under 15 words. Plain English. No preamble. BEFORE OUTPUT: Answer in 3 bullet points: why is the sky blue during the day and red at sunset? Keep each bullet under 15 words. Plain English. No preamble. #1 The sky appears blue because of the scattering of sunlight by tiny water droplets in the atmosphere, which causes light to be scattered rather than absorbed. This process is called Rayleigh scattering. #2 At sunrise or sunset, the sun's rays are blocked by the Earth's atmosphere, causing the sky to AFTER (task + memory context): Answer in 3 bullet points: why is the sky blue during the day and red at sunset? Keep each bullet under 15 words. Plain English. No preamble. CONTEXT: MEMORY SUMMARY: At sunset light travels through more atmosphere, scattering blue away, leaving red. The sky is blue because short wavelengths scatter in all directions overhead. Rayleigh scattering explains both. Simple English for kids. AFTER OUTPUT: Answer in 3 bullet points: why is the sky blue during the day and red at sunset? Keep each bullet under 15 words. Plain English. No preamble. CONTEXT: MEMORY SUMMARY: At sunset light travels through more atmosphere, scattering blue away, leaving red. The sky is blue because short wavelengths scatter in all directions overhead. Rayleigh scattering explains both. Simple English for kids. # Why is the sky blue during the day? The sky appears blue because sunlight passes through Earth's atmosphere, where shorter wavelengths (blue) are scattered more than longer wavelengths (red). This causes the blue light to be scattered out of our line of sight, while the red light is absorbed by the Earth's surface tok_saved=-177.1% ms_delta=-5409.1ms peak_rss=1794MB